mirror of
https://github.com/systemd/systemd.git
synced 2024-11-30 13:53:39 +08:00
8bf9eb7e6b
We had a description in README, and an outdated list in the man page. I think we should keep a reference-style list in the man page. The description in README is more free-form.
415 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
415 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
systemd System and Service Manager
|
|
|
|
WEB SITE:
|
|
https://systemd.io
|
|
|
|
GIT:
|
|
git@github.com:systemd/systemd.git
|
|
https://github.com/systemd/systemd
|
|
|
|
MAILING LIST:
|
|
https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
|
|
|
|
IRC:
|
|
#systemd on irc.libera.chat
|
|
|
|
BUG REPORTS:
|
|
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues
|
|
|
|
OLDER DOCUMENTATION:
|
|
|
|
http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/systemd.html
|
|
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd
|
|
|
|
AUTHOR:
|
|
Lennart Poettering
|
|
Kay Sievers
|
|
...and many others
|
|
|
|
LICENSE:
|
|
LGPL-2.1-or-later for all code, exceptions noted in LICENSES/README.md
|
|
|
|
REQUIREMENTS:
|
|
Linux kernel ≥ 3.15
|
|
≥ 4.3 for ambient capabilities
|
|
≥ 4.5 for pids controller in cgroup v2
|
|
≥ 4.6 for cgroup namespaces
|
|
≥ 4.9 for RENAME_NOREPLACE support in vfat
|
|
≥ 4.10 for cgroup-bpf egress and ingress hooks
|
|
≥ 4.15 for cgroup-bpf device hook and cpu controller in cgroup v2
|
|
≥ 4.17 for cgroup-bpf socket address hooks
|
|
≥ 4.20 for PSI (used by systemd-oomd)
|
|
≥ 5.3 for bounded loops in BPF program
|
|
≥ 5.4 for signed Verity images
|
|
≥ 5.7 for BPF links and the BPF LSM hook
|
|
|
|
Kernel versions below 4.15 have significant gaps in functionality and
|
|
are not recommended for use with this version of systemd. Taint flag
|
|
'old-kernel' will be set. Systemd will most likely still function, but
|
|
upstream support and testing are limited.
|
|
|
|
Kernel Config Options:
|
|
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS
|
|
CONFIG_CGROUPS (it is OK to disable all controllers)
|
|
CONFIG_INOTIFY_USER
|
|
CONFIG_SIGNALFD
|
|
CONFIG_TIMERFD
|
|
CONFIG_EPOLL
|
|
CONFIG_UNIX (it requires CONFIG_NET, but every other flag in it is not necessary)
|
|
CONFIG_SYSFS
|
|
CONFIG_PROC_FS
|
|
CONFIG_FHANDLE (libudev, mount and bind mount handling)
|
|
|
|
Kernel crypto/hash API:
|
|
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_HASH
|
|
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HMAC
|
|
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256
|
|
|
|
udev will fail to work with the legacy sysfs layout:
|
|
CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED=n
|
|
|
|
Legacy hotplug slows down the system and confuses udev:
|
|
CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH=""
|
|
|
|
Userspace firmware loading is not supported and should be disabled in
|
|
the kernel:
|
|
CONFIG_FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER=n
|
|
|
|
Some udev rules and virtualization detection relies on it:
|
|
CONFIG_DMIID
|
|
|
|
Support for some SCSI devices serial number retrieval, to create
|
|
additional symlinks in /dev/disk/ and /dev/tape:
|
|
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_BSG
|
|
|
|
Required for PrivateNetwork= in service units:
|
|
CONFIG_NET_NS
|
|
Note that systemd-localed.service and other systemd units use
|
|
PrivateNetwork so this is effectively required.
|
|
|
|
Required for PrivateUsers= in service units:
|
|
CONFIG_USER_NS
|
|
|
|
Optional but strongly recommended:
|
|
CONFIG_IPV6
|
|
CONFIG_AUTOFS_FS
|
|
CONFIG_TMPFS_XATTR
|
|
CONFIG_{TMPFS,EXT4_FS,XFS,BTRFS_FS,...}_POSIX_ACL
|
|
CONFIG_SECCOMP
|
|
CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER (required for seccomp support)
|
|
CONFIG_KCMP (for the kcmp() syscall, used to be under
|
|
CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE before ~5.12)
|
|
|
|
Required for CPUShares= in resource control unit settings:
|
|
CONFIG_CGROUP_SCHED
|
|
CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED
|
|
|
|
Required for CPUQuota= in resource control unit settings:
|
|
CONFIG_CFS_BANDWIDTH
|
|
|
|
Required for IPAddressDeny=, IPAddressAllow=, IPIngressFilterPath=,
|
|
IPEgressFilterPath= in resource control unit settings unit settings:
|
|
CONFIG_BPF
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_JIT
|
|
CONFIG_HAVE_EBPF_JIT
|
|
CONFIG_CGROUP_BPF
|
|
|
|
Required for SocketBind{Allow|Deny}=, RestrictNetworkInterfaces= in
|
|
resource control unit settings:
|
|
CONFIG_BPF
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_JIT
|
|
CONFIG_HAVE_EBPF_JIT
|
|
CONFIG_CGROUP_BPF
|
|
|
|
For UEFI systems:
|
|
CONFIG_EFIVAR_FS
|
|
CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION
|
|
|
|
Required for signed Verity images support:
|
|
CONFIG_DM_VERITY_VERIFY_ROOTHASH_SIG
|
|
|
|
Required for RestrictFileSystems= in service units:
|
|
CONFIG_BPF
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL
|
|
CONFIG_BPF_LSM
|
|
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF
|
|
CONFIG_LSM="...,bpf" or kernel booted with lsm="...,bpf".
|
|
|
|
We recommend to turn off Real-Time group scheduling in the kernel when
|
|
using systemd. RT group scheduling effectively makes RT scheduling
|
|
unavailable for most userspace, since it requires explicit assignment of
|
|
RT budgets to each unit whose processes making use of RT. As there's no
|
|
sensible way to assign these budgets automatically this cannot really be
|
|
fixed, and it's best to disable group scheduling hence:
|
|
CONFIG_RT_GROUP_SCHED=n
|
|
|
|
It's a good idea to disable the implicit creation of networking bonding
|
|
devices by the kernel networking bonding module, so that the
|
|
automatically created "bond0" interface doesn't conflict with any such
|
|
device created by systemd-networkd (or other tools). Ideally there would
|
|
be a kernel compile-time option for this, but there currently isn't. The
|
|
next best thing is to make this change through a modprobe.d drop-in.
|
|
This is shipped by default, see modprobe.d/systemd.conf.
|
|
|
|
Required for systemd-nspawn:
|
|
CONFIG_DEVPTS_MULTIPLE_INSTANCES or Linux kernel >= 4.7
|
|
|
|
Required for systemd-oomd:
|
|
CONFIG_PSI
|
|
|
|
Note that kernel auditing is broken when used with systemd's container
|
|
code. When using systemd in conjunction with containers, please make
|
|
sure to either turn off auditing at runtime using the kernel command
|
|
line option "audit=0", or turn it off at kernel compile time using:
|
|
CONFIG_AUDIT=n
|
|
If systemd is compiled with libseccomp support on architectures which do
|
|
not use socketcall() and where seccomp is supported (this effectively
|
|
means x86-64 and ARM, but excludes 32-bit x86!), then nspawn will now
|
|
install a work-around seccomp filter that makes containers boot even
|
|
with audit being enabled. This works correctly only on kernels 3.14 and
|
|
newer though. TL;DR: turn audit off, still.
|
|
|
|
glibc >= 2.16
|
|
libcap
|
|
libmount >= 2.30 (from util-linux)
|
|
(util-linux *must* be built without --enable-libmount-support-mtab)
|
|
libseccomp >= 2.3.1 (optional)
|
|
libblkid >= 2.24 (from util-linux) (optional)
|
|
libkmod >= 15 (optional)
|
|
PAM >= 1.1.2 (optional)
|
|
libcryptsetup (optional), >= 2.3.0 required for signed Verity images support
|
|
libaudit (optional)
|
|
libacl (optional)
|
|
libbpf >= 0.2.0 (optional)
|
|
libfdisk >= 2.32 (from util-linux) (optional)
|
|
libselinux (optional)
|
|
liblzma (optional)
|
|
liblz4 >= 1.3.0 / 130 (optional)
|
|
libzstd >= 1.4.0 (optional)
|
|
libgcrypt (optional)
|
|
libqrencode (optional)
|
|
libmicrohttpd (optional)
|
|
libpython (optional)
|
|
libidn2 or libidn (optional)
|
|
gnutls >= 3.1.4 (optional, >= 3.6.0 is required to support DNS-over-TLS with gnutls)
|
|
openssl >= 1.1.0 (optional, required to support DNS-over-TLS with openssl)
|
|
elfutils >= 158 (optional)
|
|
polkit (optional)
|
|
tzdata >= 2014f (optional)
|
|
pkg-config
|
|
gperf
|
|
docbook-xsl (optional, required for documentation)
|
|
xsltproc (optional, required for documentation)
|
|
python-jinja2
|
|
python-lxml (optional, required to build the indices)
|
|
python >= 3.5
|
|
meson >= 0.53.2
|
|
ninja
|
|
gcc, awk, sed, grep, and similar tools
|
|
clang >= 10.0, llvm >= 10.0 (optional, required to build BPF programs
|
|
from source code in C)
|
|
gnu-efi >= 3.0.5 (optional, required for systemd-boot)
|
|
|
|
During runtime, you need the following additional
|
|
dependencies:
|
|
|
|
util-linux >= v2.27.1 required
|
|
dbus >= 1.4.0 (strictly speaking optional, but recommended)
|
|
NOTE: If using dbus < 1.9.18, you should override the default
|
|
policy directory (--with-dbuspolicydir=/etc/dbus-1/system.d).
|
|
dracut (optional)
|
|
polkit (optional)
|
|
|
|
To build in directory build/:
|
|
meson setup build/ && ninja -C build/
|
|
|
|
Any configuration options can be specified as -Darg=value... arguments
|
|
to meson. After the build directory is initially configured, meson will
|
|
refuse to run again, and options must be changed with:
|
|
meson configure -Darg=value build/
|
|
meson configure without any arguments will print out available options and
|
|
their current values.
|
|
|
|
Useful commands:
|
|
ninja -C build -v some/target
|
|
meson test -C build/
|
|
sudo meson install -C build/ --no-rebuild
|
|
DESTDIR=... meson install -C build/
|
|
|
|
A tarball can be created with:
|
|
v=250 && git archive --prefix=systemd-$v/ v$v | zstd >systemd-$v.tar.zstd
|
|
|
|
When systemd-hostnamed is used, it is strongly recommended to install
|
|
nss-myhostname to ensure that, in a world of dynamically changing
|
|
hostnames, the hostname stays resolvable under all circumstances. In
|
|
fact, systemd-hostnamed will warn if nss-myhostname is not installed.
|
|
|
|
nss-systemd must be enabled on systemd systems, as that's required for
|
|
DynamicUser= to work. Note that we ship services out-of-the-box that
|
|
make use of DynamicUser= now, hence enabling nss-systemd is not
|
|
optional.
|
|
|
|
Note that the build prefix for systemd must be /usr. (Moreover, packages
|
|
systemd relies on — such as D-Bus — really should use the same prefix,
|
|
otherwise you are on your own.) -Dsplit-usr=false (which is the default
|
|
and does not need to be specified) is the recommended setting.
|
|
-Dsplit-usr=true can be used to give a semblance of support for systems
|
|
with programs installed split between / and /usr. Moving everything
|
|
under /usr is strongly encouraged.
|
|
|
|
Additional packages are necessary to run some tests:
|
|
- busybox (used by test/TEST-13-NSPAWN-SMOKE)
|
|
- nc (used by test/TEST-12-ISSUE-3171)
|
|
- python3-pyparsing
|
|
- python3-evdev (used by hwdb parsing tests)
|
|
- strace (used by test/test-functions)
|
|
- capsh (optional, used by test-execute)
|
|
|
|
POLICY FOR SUPPORT OF DISTRIBUTIONS AND ARCHITECTURES:
|
|
|
|
systemd main branch and latest major or stable releases are generally
|
|
expected to compile on current versions of popular distributions (at
|
|
least all non-EOL versions of Fedora, Debian unstable/testing/stable,
|
|
latest Ubuntu LTS and non-LTS releases, openSUSE Tumbleweed/Leap,
|
|
CentOS Stream 8 and 9, up-to-date Arch, etc.) We will generally
|
|
attempt to support also other non-EOL versions of various distros.
|
|
Features which would break compilation on slightly-older distributions
|
|
will only be introduced if there are significant reasons for this
|
|
(i.e. supporting them interferes with development or requires too many
|
|
resources to support). In some cases backports of specific libraries or
|
|
tools might be required.
|
|
|
|
The policy is similar wrt. architecture support. systemd is regularly
|
|
tested on popular architectures (currently amd64, i386, arm64, ppc64el,
|
|
and s390x), but should compile and work also on other architectures, for
|
|
which support has been added. systemd will emit warnings when
|
|
architecture-specific constants are not defined.
|
|
|
|
USERS AND GROUPS:
|
|
Default udev rules use the following standard system group names, which
|
|
need to be resolvable by getgrnam() at any time, even in the very early
|
|
boot stages, where no other databases and network are available:
|
|
|
|
audio, cdrom, dialout, disk, input, kmem, kvm, lp, render, tape, tty, video
|
|
|
|
During runtime, the journal daemon requires the "systemd-journal" system
|
|
group to exist. New journal files will be readable by this group (but
|
|
not writable), which may be used to grant specific users read access. In
|
|
addition, system groups "wheel" and "adm" will be given read-only access
|
|
to journal files using systemd-tmpfiles.service.
|
|
|
|
The journal remote daemon requires the "systemd-journal-remote" system
|
|
user and group to exist. During execution this network facing service
|
|
will drop privileges and assume this uid/gid for security reasons.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, the network management daemon requires the "systemd-network"
|
|
system user and group to exist.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, the name resolution daemon requires the "systemd-resolve"
|
|
system user and group to exist.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, the coredump support requires the "systemd-coredump" system
|
|
user and group to exist.
|
|
|
|
NSS:
|
|
systemd ships with four glibc NSS modules:
|
|
|
|
nss-myhostname resolves the local hostname to locally configured IP
|
|
addresses, as well as "localhost" to 127.0.0.1/::1.
|
|
|
|
nss-resolve enables DNS resolution via the systemd-resolved DNS/LLMNR
|
|
caching stub resolver "systemd-resolved".
|
|
|
|
nss-mymachines enables resolution of all local containers registered
|
|
with machined to their respective IP addresses.
|
|
|
|
nss-systemd enables resolution of users/group registered via the
|
|
User/Group Record Lookup API (https://systemd.io/USER_GROUP_API),
|
|
including all dynamically allocated service users. (See the
|
|
DynamicUser= setting in unit files.)
|
|
|
|
To make use of these NSS modules, please add them to the "hosts:",
|
|
"passwd:" and "group:" lines in /etc/nsswitch.conf. The "resolve" module
|
|
should replace the glibc "dns" module in this file (and don't worry, it
|
|
chain-loads the "dns" module if it can't talk to resolved).
|
|
|
|
The four modules should be used in the following order:
|
|
|
|
passwd: compat systemd
|
|
group: compat systemd
|
|
hosts: files mymachines resolve [!UNAVAIL=return] dns myhostname
|
|
|
|
SYSV INIT.D SCRIPTS:
|
|
When calling "systemctl enable/disable/is-enabled" on a unit which is a
|
|
SysV init.d script, it calls /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-sysv-install;
|
|
this needs to translate the action into the distribution specific
|
|
mechanism such as chkconfig or update-rc.d. Packagers need to provide
|
|
this script if you need this functionality (you don't if you disabled
|
|
SysV init support).
|
|
|
|
Please see src/systemctl/systemd-sysv-install.SKELETON for how this
|
|
needs to look like, and provide an implementation at the marked places.
|
|
|
|
WARNINGS and TAINT FLAGS:
|
|
systemd will warn during early boot if /usr is not already mounted at
|
|
this point (that means: either located on the same file system as / or
|
|
already mounted in the initrd). While in systemd itself very little
|
|
will break if /usr is on a separate late-mounted partition, many of its
|
|
dependencies very likely will break sooner or later in one form or
|
|
another. For example, udev rules tend to refer to binaries in /usr,
|
|
binaries that link to libraries in /usr, or binaries that refer to data
|
|
files in /usr. Since these breakages are not always directly visible,
|
|
systemd will warn about this. Such setups are not really supported by
|
|
the basic set of Linux OS components. Taint flag 'split-usr' will be
|
|
set when this condition is detected.
|
|
|
|
For more information on this issue consult
|
|
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/separate-usr-is-broken
|
|
|
|
systemd will warn if the filesystem is not usr-merged (i.e.: /bin, /sbin
|
|
and /lib* are not symlinks to their counterparts under /usr). Taint flag
|
|
'unmerged-usr' will be set when this condition is detected.
|
|
|
|
For more information on this issue consult
|
|
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TheCaseForTheUsrMerge
|
|
|
|
systemd requires that the /run mount point exists. systemd also
|
|
requires that /var/run is a symlink to /run. Taint flag 'var-run-bad'
|
|
will be set when this condition is detected.
|
|
|
|
Systemd will also warn when the cgroup support is unavailable in the
|
|
kernel (taint flag 'cgroups-missing'), the system is using the old
|
|
cgroup hierarchy (taint flag 'cgroupsv1'), the hardware clock is
|
|
running in non-UTC mode (taint flag 'local-hwclock'), the kernel
|
|
overflow UID or GID are not 65534 (taint flags 'overflowuid-not-65534'
|
|
and 'overflowgid-not-65534'), the UID or GID range assigned to the
|
|
running systemd instance covers less than 0…65534 (taint flags
|
|
'short-uid-range' and 'short-gid-range').
|
|
|
|
Taint conditions are logged during boot, but may also be checked at any
|
|
time with:
|
|
|
|
busctl get-property org.freedesktop.systemd1 /org/freedesktop/systemd1 org.freedesktop.systemd1.Manager Tainted
|
|
|
|
See org.freedesktop.systemd1(5) for more information.
|
|
|
|
VALGRIND:
|
|
To run systemd under valgrind, compile with meson option
|
|
-Dvalgrind=true and have valgrind development headers installed
|
|
(i.e. valgrind-devel or equivalent). Otherwise, false positives will be
|
|
triggered by code which violates some rules but is actually safe. Note
|
|
that valgrind generates nice output only on exit(), hence on shutdown
|
|
we don't execve() systemd-shutdown.
|
|
|
|
STABLE BRANCHES AND BACKPORTS:
|
|
Stable branches with backported patches are available in the
|
|
systemd-stable repo at https://github.com/systemd/systemd-stable.
|
|
|
|
Stable branches are started for certain releases of systemd and named
|
|
after them, e.g. v238-stable. Stable branches are managed by
|
|
distribution maintainers on an as needed basis. See
|
|
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/Backports for some
|
|
more information and examples.
|